Tok Pisin: Difference between revisions
m I added a Wikitongues video of a Tok Pisin speaker. |
m wiki linked 'lingua franca' |
||
(172 intermediate revisions by 94 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{ |
{{Short description|English creole spoken in Papua New Guinea}} |
||
{{Infobox language |
{{Infobox language |
||
|name = Tok Pisin |
|name = Tok Pisin |
||
|pronunciation = {{ |
|pronunciation = {{IPA-all|tok pisin|}}{{sfn|Smith|2008}} |
||
|states = [[Papua New Guinea]] |
|states = [[Papua New Guinea]] |
||
|speakers = {{sigfig| |
|speakers = {{sigfig|125,740|2}} |
||
|date = |
|date = 2004–2016 |
||
|ref= |
|ref = e25 |
||
|speakers2 = |
|speakers2 = [[Second language|L2]] speakers: 4,000,000<ref name=e25/> |
||
|familycolor = Creole |
|familycolor = Creole |
||
|fam1 = [[English-based creole languages|English Creole]] |
|fam1 = [[English-based creole languages|English Creole]] |
||
Line 21: | Line 21: | ||
|glottorefname=Tok Pisin |
|glottorefname=Tok Pisin |
||
}} |
}} |
||
[[File:WIKITONGUES- Priscilla speaking Tok Pisin.webm|thumb|A Tok Pisin speaker, recorded in [[Taiwan]] |
[[File:WIKITONGUES- Priscilla speaking Tok Pisin.webm|thumb|A Tok Pisin speaker, recorded in [[Taiwan]]]] |
||
'''Tok Pisin''' ({{IPAc-en|lang|t|ɒ|k|_|ˈ|p|ɪ|s|ɪ|n|}},<ref name="pronounce1">Laurie Bauer, 2007, ''The Linguistics Student’s Handbook'', Edinburgh</ref><ref name="pronounce2">{{Cite web|url=https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/tok_pisin|title=Tok Pisin {{!}} Definition of Tok Pisin in English by Oxford Dictionaries|website=Oxford Dictionaries {{!}} English|access-date=2018-09-24}}</ref> <small>Tok Pisin</small> {{IPA|/ˌtok piˈsin/|Tok Pisin:}}<ref name="Smith2008" />), often referred to by English speakers as "'''New Guinea Pidgin'''" or simply "Pidgin", is a [[creole language]] spoken throughout [[Papua New Guinea]]. It is an official language of Papua New Guinea and the most widely used language in the country. However, in parts of [[Western Province (Papua New Guinea)|Western]], [[Gulf Province (Papua New Guinea)|Gulf]], [[Central Province (Papua New Guinea)|Central]], [[Oro Province]] and [[Milne Bay Province]]s, the use of Tok Pisin has a shorter history, and is less universal, especially among older people. |
|||
'''Tok Pisin''' ({{IPAc-en|lang|t|ɒ|k|_|ˈ|p|ɪ|s|ɪ|n|}} {{respell|TOK|_|PISS|in}},<ref name="pronounce1">Laurie Bauer, 2007, ''The Linguistics Student's Handbook'', Edinburgh</ref><ref name="pronounce2">{{Cite web |url=https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/tok_pisin |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180924145535/https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/tok_pisin |url-status=dead |archive-date=September 24, 2018 |title=Tok Pisin {{!}} Definition of Tok Pisin in English by Oxford Dictionaries |website=Oxford Dictionaries {{!}} English |access-date=2018-09-24}}</ref> {{IPAc-en|t|ɔː|k|,_|-|z|ɪ|n}} {{respell|tawk|,_-|zin}};<ref>{{Cite web |title=Definition of ''Tok Pisin''|url=https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/Tok+Pisin |access-date=2022-11-16 |website=www.merriam-webster.com |language=en}}</ref> <small>Tok Pisin</small> {{IPA-all|tok pisin|}}{{sfn|Smith|2008}}), often referred to by English speakers as '''New Guinea Pidgin''' or simply [[Pidgin]], is an [[English-based creole languages|English]] [[creole language]] spoken throughout [[Papua New Guinea]]. It is an official [[Languages of Papua New Guinea|language of Papua New Guinea]] and the most widely used language in the country. However, in parts of the southern provinces of [[Western Province (Papua New Guinea)|Western]], [[Gulf Province|Gulf]], [[Central Province (Papua New Guinea)|Central]], [[Oro Province|Oro]], and [[Milne Bay Province|Milne Bay]], the use of Tok Pisin has a shorter history and is less universal, especially among older people. |
|||
Between five and six million people use Tok Pisin to some degree, although not all speak it fluently. Many now learn it as a first language, in particular the children of parents or grandparents who originally spoke different languages (for example, a mother from [[Madang]] and a father from [[Rabaul]]). Urban families in particular, and those of [[police]] and defence force members, often communicate among themselves in Tok Pisin, either never gaining fluency in a local language ({{lang|tpi|tok ples}}), or learning a local language as a second (or third) language, after Tok Pisin (and possibly [[English language|English]]). Perhaps one million people now use Tok Pisin as a primary language. Tok Pisin is "slowly crowding out" other [[languages of Papua New Guinea]].<ref>{{cite news|author1=A.V.|title=Papua New Guinea’s incredible linguistic diversity|url=https://www.economist.com/blogs/economist-explains/2017/07/economist-explains-14|accessdate=20 July 2017|work=[[The Economist]]|date=24 July 2017}}</ref> |
|||
Between five and six million people use Tok Pisin to some degree, although not all speak it fluently. Many now learn it as a first language, in particular the children of parents or grandparents who originally spoke different languages (for example, a mother from [[Madang]] and a father from [[Rabaul]]). Urban families in particular, and those of [[Royal Papua New Guinea Constabulary|police]] and [[Papua New Guinea Defence Force|defence force]] members, often communicate among themselves in Tok Pisin, either never gaining fluency in a local language ({{lang|tpi|tok ples}}) or learning a local language as a second (or third) language, after Tok Pisin (and possibly [[English language|English]]). Over the decades, Tok Pisin has increasingly overtaken [[Hiri Motu]] as the dominant [[lingua franca]] among town-dwellers.{{sfn|Mühlhäusler|Dutton|Romaine|2003|pp=1-5}} Perhaps one million people now use Tok Pisin as a primary language. Tok Pisin is slowly "crowding out" other [[languages of Papua New Guinea]].<ref>{{cite news |author1=A.V. |title=Papua New Guinea's incredible linguistic diversity |url=https://www.economist.com/blogs/economist-explains/2017/07/economist-explains-14 |access-date=20 July 2017 |newspaper=[[The Economist]] |date=24 July 2017}}</ref>{{sfn|Mühlhäusler|Dutton|Romaine|2003|pp=1-5}} |
|||
==Name== |
==Name== |
||
[[File:F. Mihatlic SVD The Jacaranda Dictionary and Grammar of Melanesian Pidgin.jpg|right|thumb| |
[[File:F. Mihatlic SVD The Jacaranda Dictionary and Grammar of Melanesian Pidgin.jpg|right|thumb|upright|A 1971 reference book on Tok Pisin (referring to the language as ''Melanesian Pidgin'')]] |
||
[[File:Tok-Pisin New-Guinea-Pidgin Pidgin-English Melanesian-Pidgin Papua-New-Guinea-Hotel-Room-Door-Sign (DSC 3096).jpg|thumb|Hotel |
[[File:Tok-Pisin New-Guinea-Pidgin Pidgin-English Melanesian-Pidgin Papua-New-Guinea-Hotel-Room-Door-Sign (DSC 3096).jpg|thumb|Hotel room door signs in Papua New Guinea]] |
||
{{lang|tpi|Tok}} |
{{lang|tpi|Tok}} originates from English ''talk'', but has a wider application, also meaning 'word, speech, language'. {{lang|tpi|Pisin}} derives from the English word ''[[pidgin]]''; the latter, in turn, may originate in the word ''business'', which is descriptive of the typical development and use of pidgins as inter-ethnic trade languages. |
||
While Tok Pisin's name in the language is {{lang|tpi|Tok Pisin}}, it is also called "New Guinea Pidgin" |
While Tok Pisin's name in the language is {{lang|tpi|Tok Pisin}}, it is also called "New Guinea Pidgin"{{sfn|Nupela Testamen bilong Bikpela Jisas Kraist|1969}} in English. Papua New Guinean [[English language|anglophones]] often refer to Tok Pisin as "Pidgin" when speaking English.{{notetag|The published court reports of Papua New Guinea refer to Tok Pisin as "Pidgin": see for example ''Schubert v The State'' [1979] PNGLR 66.}} This usage of "Pidgin" differs from the term ''[[pidgin]] (language)'' as used in linguistics. ''Tok Pisin'' is not a pidgin in the latter sense, since it has become a first language for many people (rather than simply a ''[[lingua franca]]'' to facilitate communication with speakers of other languages). As such, it is considered a [[Creole language|creole]] in linguistic terminology.{{notetag|See the [http://glottolog.org/resource/languoid/id/tokp1240 ''Glottolog'' entry for Tok Pisin] (itself evidence that the linguistic community considers it a language in its own right, and prefers to name it ''Tok Pisin''), as well as numerous references therein.}} |
||
==Classification== |
==Classification== |
||
The Tok Pisin language is a result of Pacific Islanders intermixing, when people speaking numerous different languages were sent to work on plantations in Queensland and various islands (see [[South Sea Islander]] and [[blackbirding]]). The labourers began to develop a pidgin, drawing vocabulary primarily from English, but also from [[German language|German]], [[Malay language|Malay]], [[Portuguese language|Portuguese]] and their own [[Austronesian languages]] (perhaps especially [[Kuanua language|Kuanua]], that of the [[Tolai people|Tolai]] people of [[East New Britain]]). |
|||
The Tok Pisin language is a result of Pacific Islanders intermixing, when people speaking numerous different languages were sent to work on plantations in Queensland and various islands (see [[South Sea Islander]] and [[Blackbirding]]). The labourers began to develop a pidgin, drawing vocabulary primarily from English, but also from [[German language|German]], [[Malay language|Malay]], [[Portuguese language|Portuguese]] and their own [[Austronesian languages]] (perhaps especially [[Kuanua language|Kuanua]], that of the [[Tolai people|Tolai]] people of [[East New Britain]]). |
|||
This English-based pidgin evolved into Tok Pisin in [[German New Guinea]] (where the German-based creole [[Unserdeutsch language|Unserdeutsch]] was also spoken). It became a widely used lingua franca and language of interaction between rulers and ruled, and among the ruled themselves who did not share a common vernacular. Tok Pisin and the closely related [[Bislama]] in [[Vanuatu]] and [[Pijin]] in the [[Solomon Islands]], which developed in parallel, have traditionally been treated as varieties of a single Melanesian Pidgin English or "Neo-Melanesian" language. The flourishing of the mainly English-based Tok Pisin in German New Guinea (despite the language of the metropolitan power being German) is to be contrasted with [[Hiri Motu]], the lingua franca of [[Territory of Papua|Papua]], which was derived not from English but from [[Motu language|Motu]], the vernacular of the indigenous people of the [[Port Moresby]] area. |
This English-based pidgin evolved into Tok Pisin in [[German New Guinea]] (where the German-based creole [[Unserdeutsch language|Unserdeutsch]] was also spoken). It became a widely used lingua franca and language of interaction between rulers and ruled, and among the ruled themselves who did not share a common vernacular. Tok Pisin and the closely related [[Bislama]] in [[Vanuatu]] and [[Pijin]] in the [[Solomon Islands]], which developed in parallel, have traditionally been treated as varieties of a single Melanesian Pidgin English or "Neo-Melanesian" language. The flourishing of the mainly English-based Tok Pisin in German New Guinea (despite the language of the metropolitan power being German) is to be contrasted with [[Hiri Motu]], the lingua franca of [[Territory of Papua|Papua]], which was derived not from English but from [[Motu language|Motu]], the vernacular of the indigenous people of the [[Port Moresby]] area. |
||
Line 43: | Line 43: | ||
==Regional variations== |
==Regional variations== |
||
There are considerable variations in vocabulary and grammar in various parts of Papua New Guinea, with distinct dialects in the New Guinea Highlands, the north coast of Papua New Guinea, and islands outside of New Guinea. For example, Pidgin speakers from [[Finschhafen]] speak rather quickly and often have difficulty making themselves understood elsewhere. The variant spoken on [[Bougainville Island|Bougainville]] and [[Buka, Papua New Guinea|Buka]] is moderately distinct from that of [[New Ireland (island)|New Ireland]] and [[East New Britain]] but is much closer to that than it is to the [[Pijin]] spoken in the rest of the Solomon Islands. |
There are considerable variations in vocabulary and grammar in various parts of Papua New Guinea, with distinct dialects in the [[New Guinea Highlands]], the north coast of Papua New Guinea, and islands outside of New Guinea. For example, Pidgin speakers from [[Finschhafen]] speak rather quickly and often have difficulty making themselves understood elsewhere. The variant spoken on [[Bougainville Island|Bougainville]] and [[Buka, Papua New Guinea|Buka]] is moderately distinct from that of [[New Ireland (island)|New Ireland]] and [[East New Britain]] but is much closer to that than it is to the [[Pijin]] spoken in the rest of the Solomon Islands. |
||
There are 4 [[Sociolect|sociolects]] of Tok Pisin: |
|||
# {{lang|tpi|Tok Bus}} (meaning "talk of the remote areas") or {{lang|tpi|Tok Kanaka}} (meaning "talk of the people of the remote areas") |
|||
# {{lang|tpi|Tok Bilong Asples}} (meaning "language of the villages") which is the traditional rural Tok Pisin |
|||
# {{lang|tpi|Tok Skul}} (meaning "talk of the schools") or {{lang|tpi|Tok Bilong Taun}} (meaning "talk of the Towns") which is the urban Tok Pisin |
|||
# {{lang|tpi|Tok Masta}} (meaning "language of the colonizers", unsystematically simplified English with some Tok Pisin words<ref name="Lee">{{cite book |last1=Mühlhäusler |first1=Peter |last2=Monaghan |first2=Paul |title=Pidgin phrasebook |date=1999 |publisher=Lonely Planet Publications |location=Hawthorn, Vic., Australia |isbn=0864425872 |page=99 |edition=2nd |language=en}}</ref>){{sfn|Mühlhäusler|Dutton|Romaine|2003|pp=1-5}} |
|||
==Alphabet== |
==Alphabet== |
||
The Tok Pisin alphabet contains |
The Tok Pisin alphabet contains 21 [[Letter (alphabet)|letters]], five of which are [[vowel]]s, and four [[Digraph (orthography)|digraph]]s.{{sfn|Mundhenk|1990|page=372}} The letters are (vowels in bold): |
||
:'''a''', b, d, '''e''', f, g, h, '''i''' |
:'''a''', b, d, '''e''', f, g, h, '''i''', k, l, m, n, '''o''', p, r, s, t, '''u''', v, w, y |
||
Three of the digraphs ({{angbr|ai}}, {{angbr|au}}, and {{angbr|oi}}) denote [[diphthong]]s while the fourth, {{angbr|ng}}, is used for both {{IPA|/ŋ/}} and {{IPA|/ŋɡ/}}. |
|||
The four digraphs note [[diphthong]]s, as well as certain consonants: |
|||
:{{angbr|'''ai'''}}, {{angbr|'''au'''}}, {{angbr|'''oi'''}} and {{angbr|ng}} (used for both {{IPA|/ŋ/}} and {{IPA|/ŋɡ/}}) |
|||
==Phonology== |
==Phonology== |
||
Tok Pisin |
Tok Pisin has a smaller number of [[phoneme|phonemes]] than its [[lexifier]] language, [[English_phonology#Phonemes|English]].{{sfn|Smith|2008|page=195}} It has around 24 core phonemes:{{sfn|Smith|2008|page=195}} 5 [[vowel]]s and around 19 [[consonant]]s. However, this varies with the local [[Substrata (linguistics)|substrate]] languages and the level of [[education]] of the speaker. More educated speakers, and/or those where the substrate language(s) have larger phoneme inventories, may have as many as 10 distinct vowels. |
||
Nasal plus plosive offsets lose the plosive element in Tok Pisin e.g. English ''hand'' becomes Tok Pisin {{lang|tpi|han}}. Furthermore, [[Final devoicing|voiced plosives become voiceless at the ends of words]], so that English ''pig'' is rendered as {{lang|tpi|pik}} in Tok Pisin. |
Nasal plus plosive offsets lose the plosive element in Tok Pisin e.g. English ''hand'' becomes Tok Pisin {{lang|tpi|han}}. Furthermore, [[Final devoicing|voiced plosives become voiceless at the ends of words]], so that English ''pig'' is rendered as {{lang|tpi|pik}} in Tok Pisin. |
||
===Consonants=== |
===Consonants=== |
||
{| class="wikitable" |
|||
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;" |
|||
! |
|||
|+ Consonant phonemes{{sfn|Smith|2008|page=195}} |
|||
! align="center"|[[labial consonant|Labial]] |
|||
! colspan="2"| |
|||
! align="center"|[[Coronal consonant|Coronal]] |
|||
! [[labial consonant|Labial]] |
|||
! align="center"|[[Palatal]] |
|||
! |
! [[Coronal consonant|Coronal]] |
||
! |
! [[Palatal consonant|Palatal]] |
||
! [[Velar consonant|Velar]] |
|||
! [[Glottal consonant|Glottal]] |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
! colspan="2"|[[Nasal stop|Nasal]] |
|||
! [[Plosive consonant|Plosive]] |
|||
| |
| {{IPAlink|m}} |
||
| |
| {{IPAlink|n}} |
||
| |
| |
||
| |
| {{IPAlink|ŋ}} |
||
| |
| |
||
|- |
|- |
||
! [[ |
! rowspan="2" |[[Plosive]] |
||
! <small>[[voiceless]]</small> |
|||
| align="center"|{{IPA|v}} |
|||
| |
| {{IPAlink|p}} |
||
| {{IPAlink|t}} |
|||
| |
| |
||
| {{IPAlink|k}} |
|||
| |
| |
||
| align="center"|{{IPA|h}} |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
! <small>[[voiced]]</small> |
|||
! [[Nasal stop|Nasal]] |
|||
| |
| {{IPAlink|b}} |
||
| |
| {{IPAlink|d}} |
||
| |
| |
||
| |
| {{IPAlink|ɡ}} |
||
| |
| |
||
|- |
|- |
||
! colspan="2" |[[Affricate]] |
|||
! [[Lateral consonant|Lateral]] |
|||
| |
| |
||
| align="center"|{{IPA|l}} |
|||
| |
| |
||
|{{IPAlink|dʒ}} |
|||
| |
| |
||
| |
| |
||
|- |
|- |
||
! rowspan="2"|[[Fricative]] |
|||
! [[Approximant consonant|Approximant]] |
|||
! <small>[[voiceless]]</small> |
|||
| align="center"|{{IPA|w}} |
|||
| {{IPAlink|f}} |
|||
| |
|||
| |
| {{IPAlink|s}} |
||
| |
| |
||
| |
| |
||
|{{IPAlink|h}} |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
! <small>[[voiced]]</small> |
|||
! [[Rhotic consonant|Rhotic]] |
|||
| {{IPAlink|v}} |
|||
| |
|||
| align="center"|{{IPA|r}} |
|||
| |
| |
||
| |
|||
| |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|||
! colspan="2" |[[Approximant]] |
|||
| {{IPAlink|w}} |
|||
| {{IPAlink|l}} |
|||
|{{IPAlink|j}} |
|||
| |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|||
! colspan="2" |[[Rhotic consonant|Rhotic]] |
|||
| |
|||
| {{IPAlink|r}} |
|||
| |
|||
| |
| |
||
| |
| |
||
|} |
|} |
||
*Where symbols appear in pairs the one to the left represents a voiceless consonant. |
|||
*Voiced plosives are pronounced by many speakers (especially of [[Melanesian languages|Melanesian]] backgrounds) as [[Prenasalized consonant|prenasalized plosives]]. |
*Voiced plosives are pronounced by many speakers (especially of [[Melanesian languages|Melanesian]] backgrounds) as [[Prenasalized consonant|prenasalized plosives]]. |
||
*{{IPA|/t/}}, {{IPA|/d/}}, and {{IPA|/l/}} can be either dental or alveolar consonants, while {{IPA|/n/}} is only alveolar. |
*{{IPA|/t/}}, {{IPA|/d/}}, and {{IPA|/l/}} can be either dental or alveolar consonants, while {{IPA|/n/}} is only alveolar. |
||
* |
*In most Tok Pisin dialects, the phoneme {{IPA|/r/}} is pronounced as the [[alveolar tap|alveolar tap or flap]], {{IPA|[ɾ]}}. There can be variation between {{IPA|/r/}} and {{IPA|/l/}}.{{sfn|Smith|2008|page=200}} |
||
*The labiodental fricatives {{IPA|/f v/}} may be marginal, with contrastive use present only in heavily Anglicized varieties.{{sfn|Smith|2008|page=195}} The use of {{IPA|/f/}} vs. {{IPA|/p/}} is variable.{{sfn|Smith|2008|pages=199-200}} There is also variation between {{IPA|/f/}} and {{IPA|/v/}} in some words, such as {{lang|tpi|faif}}/{{lang|tpi|faiv}} 'five'.{{sfn|Smith|2008|page=196}} |
|||
*Likewise, there may be marginal use of {{IPA|/ʃ ʒ/}}.{{sfn|Smith|2008|page=195}} |
|||
===Vowels=== |
===Vowels=== |
||
Tok Pisin has five [[ |
Tok Pisin has five [[monophthong|pure vowels]]: |
||
{| class="wikitable" |
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;" |
||
|+ Vowel phonemes |
|||
! |
! |
||
! [[Front vowel|Front]] |
! [[Front vowel|Front]] |
||
! [[Back vowel|Back]] |
! [[Back vowel|Back]] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
! |
! [[Close vowel|Close]] |
||
| {{IPAlink|i}} |
|||
| {{IPAlink|u}} |
|||
|- |
|||
! [[Mid vowel|Mid]] |
|||
| {{IPAlink|e}} |
|||
| {{IPAlink|o}} |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
! |
! [[Open vowel|Open]] |
||
| |
| colspan="2" |{{IPAlink|a}} |
||
| align="center" | {{IPA|o}} |
|||
|-align=center |
|||
![[Open vowel|Open]] |
|||
| colspan="2" |{{IPA|a}} |
|||
|} |
|} |
||
==Grammar== |
==Grammar== |
||
The [[verb]] has a suffix, {{lang|tpi|-im}} ( |
The [[verb]] has a suffix, {{lang|tpi|-im}} (< Eng. ''him'') to indicate [[Transitive verb|transitivity]] ({{lang|tpi|luk}}, "look"; {{lang|tpi|lukim}}, "see"). But some verbs, such as {{lang|tpi|kaikai}} "eat", can be transitive without it. Tense is indicated by the separate words {{lang|tpi|bai}} Future (< Eng. ''by and by'') and {{lang|tpi|bin}} (past) (< Eng. ''been''). The present progressive tense is indicated by the word {{lang|tpi|stap}} – e.g. {{lang|tpi|Hem kaikai stap}} "He is eating". |
||
The [[noun]] does not indicate number, though pronouns do. |
The [[noun]] does not indicate number, though pronouns do. |
||
[[Adjective]]s usually take the suffix {{lang|tpi|-pela}} (now often pronounced {{lang|tpi|-pla}}, though more so for pronouns, and {{lang|tpi|-pela}} for adjectives; from "fellow") when modifying nouns; an exception is {{lang|tpi|liklik}} "little". |
[[Adjective]]s usually take the suffix {{lang|tpi|-pela}} (now often pronounced {{lang|tpi|-pla}}, though more so for pronouns, and {{lang|tpi|-pela}} for adjectives; from "fellow") when modifying nouns; an exception is {{lang|tpi|liklik}} "little".{{notetag|{{lang|tpi|Liklik}} can also be used as an [[adverb]] meaning "slightly", as in {{lang|tpi|dispela bikpela liklik ston}}, "this slightly big stone".}} It is also found on numerals and determiners: |
||
:Tok Pisin: |
:Tok Pisin: {{lang|tpi|wanpela}} → Eng. "one" |
||
:Tok Pisin: |
:Tok Pisin: {{lang|tpi|tupela}} → Eng. "two" |
||
:Tok Pisin: |
:Tok Pisin: {{lang|tpi|dispela boi}} → Eng. "this bloke" |
||
[[Pronoun]]s show [[ |
[[Pronoun]]s show [[Grammatical person|person]], [[Grammatical number|number]], and [[clusivity]]. The paradigm varies depending on the local languages; [[Dual grammatical number|dual number]] is common, while the [[Trial (grammatical number)|trial]] is less so. The largest Tok Pisin pronoun inventory is,{{sfn|Verhaar|1995|p=354}} |
||
{| class="wikitable" |
{| class="wikitable" |
||
Line 149: | Line 174: | ||
|- align="center" |
|- align="center" |
||
! 1st exclusive |
! 1st exclusive |
||
| mi<br/>(I)<br/>'' |
| {{lang|tpi|mi}}<br/>(I)<br/>< Eng. ''me'' || {{lang|tpi|mitupela}}<br/>(he/she and I)<br/>< Eng. *''me two fellow'' || {{lang|tpi|mitripela}}<br/>(both of them, and I)<br/>Eng. *''me three fellow'' || {{lang|tpi|mipela}}<br/>(all of them, and I)<br/>Eng. *''me fellow'' |
||
|- align="center" |
|- align="center" |
||
! 1st inclusive |
! 1st inclusive |
||
| – || yumitupela<br/>(you and I)<br/>'' |
| – || {{lang|tpi|yumitupela}}<br/>(you and I)<br/>< Eng. *''you me two fellow'' || {{lang|tpi|yumitripela}}<br/>(both of you, and I)<br/>< Eng. *''you me three fellow'' || {{lang|tpi|yumipela or yumi}}<br/>(all of you, and I)<br/>< Eng. *''you me fellow'' or *''you me'' |
||
|- align="center" |
|- align="center" |
||
! 2nd |
! 2nd |
||
| yu<br/>(thou)<br/>'' |
| {{lang|tpi|yu}}<br/>(thou)<br/>< Eng. ''you'' || {{lang|tpi|yutupela}}<br/>(you two)<br/>< Eng. *''you two fellow'' || {{lang|tpi|yutripela}}<br/>(you three)<br/>< Eng. *''you three fellow'' || {{lang|tpi|yupela}}<br/>(you four or more)<br/>< Eng. *''you fellow'' |
||
|- align="center" |
|- align="center" |
||
! 3rd |
! 3rd |
||
| em<br/>(he/she/it)<br/>'' |
| {{lang|tpi|em}}<br/>(he/she/it)<br/>< Eng. ''him'' || {{lang|tpi|tupela}}<br/>(they two)<br/>< Eng. *''two fellow'' || {{lang|tpi|tripela}}<br/>(they three)<br/>< Eng. *''three fellow'' || {{lang|tpi|ol}}<br/>(they four or more)<br/>< Eng. ''all'' |
||
|} |
|} |
||
[[Reduplication]] is very common in Tok Pisin. Sometimes it is used as a method of derivation; sometimes words just have it. Some words are distinguished only by reduplication: {{lang|tpi|sip}} "ship", {{lang|tpi|sipsip}} "sheep". |
[[Reduplication]] is very common in Tok Pisin. Sometimes it is used as a method of derivation; sometimes words just have it. Some words are distinguished only by reduplication: {{lang|tpi|sip}} "ship", {{lang|tpi|sipsip}} "sheep". |
||
There are only two proper [[preposition]]s: |
There are only two proper [[preposition]]s: |
||
* the [[Genitive case|genitive]] preposition {{lang|tpi|bilong}} (etym. < Eng. ''belong''), which is equivalent to "of", "from" and some uses of "for": e.g. {{lang|tpi|Ki bilong yu}} "your key"; {{lang|tpi|Ol bilong Godons}} "They are from Gordon's". |
|||
Tok Pisin: "{{lang|tpi|Mipela i bin go long blekmaket}}". → English: "We went to the black market". |
|||
* the [[Oblique case|oblique]] preposition {{lang|tpi|long}} (etym. < Eng. ''along''), which is used for various other relations (such as [[Locative case|locative]] or [[Dative case|dative]]): e.g. {{lang|tpi|Mipela i bin go long blekmaket}}. "We went to the black market". |
|||
Tok Pisin: "{{lang|tpi|Ki bilong yu}}" → English: "your key" |
|||
Tok Pisin: "{{lang|tpi|Ol bilong Godons}}". → English: "They are from Gordon's". (ibid. 640f). |
|||
Some [[phrase]]s are used as prepositions, such as ''long namel (bilong)'', "in the middle of". |
|||
Some [[phrase]]s are used as prepositions, such as '{{lang|tpi|long namel (bilong)'}}, "in the middle of". |
|||
Several of these features derive from the common grammatical norms of [[Austronesian languages]]<ref>The language [[Tolai language|Tolai]] is {{citation needed span|often named|date=February 2018}} as having had an important influence on early Tok Pisin.</ref> – although usually in a simplified form. Other features, such as [[word order]], are however closer to English. |
|||
Several of these features derive from the common grammatical norms of [[Austronesian languages]]{{notetag|The language [[Tolai language|Tolai]] is {{citation needed span|often named|date=February 2018}} as having had an important influence on early Tok Pisin.}} – although usually in a simplified form. Other features, such as [[word order]], are however closer to English. |
|||
Sentences which have a 3rd person subject often put the word ''i'' just before the verb. This may or may not be written separate from the verb, occasionally written as a prefix. Although the word is thought to be derived from "he" or "is", it is not itself a pronoun or a verb but a grammatical marker used in particular constructions, e.g., "{{lang|tpi|Kar i tambu long hia}}" is "car forbidden here", i.e., "no parking". |
|||
Sentences which have a 3rd person subject often put the word {{lang|tpi|i}} immediately before the verb. This may or may not be written separate from the verb, occasionally written as a prefix. Although the word is thought to be derived from "he" or "is", it is not itself a pronoun or a verb but a grammatical marker used in particular constructions, e.g., {{lang|tpi|Kar i tambu long hia}} is "car forbidden here", i.e., "no parking". |
|||
===Tense and aspect=== |
===Tense and aspect=== |
||
Past tense: marked by |
Past tense: marked by {{lang|tpi|bin}} (< Eng. ''been''): |
||
Tok Pisin: |
: Tok Pisin: {{lang|tpi|Na praim minista i '''bin''' tok olsem.}} |
||
English: |
: English: "And the prime minister spoke thus."{{sfn|Romaine|1991|p=629}} |
||
Continuative same tense is expressed through: verb + |
Continuative same tense is expressed through: verb + {{lang|tpi|i stap}}. |
||
Tok Pisin: |
: Tok Pisin: {{lang|tpi|Em i slip '''i stap'''}}. |
||
English: |
: English: "He/She is sleeping."{{sfn|Romaine|1991|p=631}} |
||
Completive or perfective aspect expressed through the word |
Completive or perfective aspect expressed through the word {{lang|tpi|pinis}} (< Eng. ''finish''): |
||
Tok Pisin: |
: Tok Pisin: {{lang|tpi|Em i lusim bot '''pinis'''.}} |
||
: English: "He had got out of the boat."<ref>{{citation|title=Tok Pisin and its relevance to theoretical issues in creolistics and general linguistics| last= Mühlhäusler | first = Peter | date = 1984}} in {{harvnb|Wurm|Mühlhäusler|1985|p=462}}.</ref> |
|||
Transitive words are expressed through |
Transitive words are expressed through {{lang|tpi|-im}} (< Eng. ''him''): |
||
Tok Pisin: |
: Tok Pisin: {{lang|tpi|Yu pinis'''im''' stori nau.}} |
||
: English: "Finish your story now!"<ref>{{citation|title=The scientific study of Tok Pisin: language planning and the Tok Pisin lexicon|last =Mühlhäusler | first = Peter | date = 1984}} in {{harvnb|Wurm|Mühlhäusler|1985|p=640}}.</ref> |
|||
English: "Finish your story now!". (ibid.: 640). |
|||
Future is expressed through the word "bai" ( |
Future is expressed through the word "{{lang|tpi|bai}}" (< Eng. ''by and by''): |
||
Tok Pisin: |
: Tok Pisin: {{lang|tpi| Nil nabaut {{strong|bai}} i ros.}} |
||
: English: "If you take just any nails that happen to be around, those will rust."{{sfn|Verhaar|1995|p=315}} |
|||
English: "They will go to their rooms now. (Mühlhäusler 1991: 642). |
|||
==Development of Tok Pisin== |
==Development of Tok Pisin== |
||
Tok Pisin is a language that developed out of regional dialects of the languages of the local inhabitants and English, brought into the country when English speakers arrived. There were four phases in the development of Tok Pisin that were laid out by Loreto Todd. |
Tok Pisin is a language that developed out of regional dialects of the languages of the local inhabitants and English, brought into the country when English speakers arrived. There were four phases in the development of Tok Pisin that were laid out by Loreto Todd. |
||
#Casual contact between English speakers and local people developed a marginal pidgin |
# Casual contact between English speakers and local people developed a marginal pidgin. |
||
#Pidgin English was used between the local people. The language expanded from the users' mother tongue |
# Pidgin English was used between the local people. The language expanded from the users' mother tongue. |
||
#As the interracial contact increased, the vocabulary expanded according to the dominant language. |
# As the interracial contact increased, the vocabulary expanded according to the dominant language. |
||
#In areas where English was the official language a depidginization occurred (Todd, 1990) |
# In areas where English was the official language, a depidginization occurred (Todd, 1990). |
||
Tok Pisin is also known as a "mixed" language. This means that it consists of characteristics of different languages. Tok Pisin obtained most of its vocabulary from the English language |
Tok Pisin is also known as a "mixed" language. This means that it consists of characteristics of different languages. Tok Pisin obtained most of its vocabulary from the English language (i.e., English is its [[lexifier]]). The origin of the syntax is a matter of debate. Edward Wolfers claimed that the syntax is from the substratum languages—the languages of the local peoples.{{sfn|Wolfers|1971|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=wG08AAAAIAAJ&pg=PA413 413]}} [[Derek Bickerton]]'s analysis of creoles, on the other hand, claims that the syntax of creoles is imposed on the grammarless pidgin by its first native speakers: the children who grow up exposed to only a pidgin rather than a more developed language such as one of the local languages or English. In this analysis, the original syntax of creoles is in some sense the default grammar humans are born with. |
||
Pidgins are less elaborated than non-Pidgin languages. Their typical characteristics found in Tok Pisin are: |
Pidgins are less elaborated than non-Pidgin languages. Their typical characteristics found in Tok Pisin are: |
||
Line 208: | Line 232: | ||
#A smaller vocabulary which leads to metaphors to supply lexical units: |
#A smaller vocabulary which leads to metaphors to supply lexical units: |
||
#*Smaller vocabulary: |
#*Smaller vocabulary: |
||
#*: |
#*:{{lang|tpi|vot}} = "election" (n) and "vote" (v) |
||
#*: |
#*:{{lang|tpi|hevi}} = "heavy" (adj) and "weight" (n) |
||
#*[[Metaphor]]s: |
#*[[Metaphor]]s: |
||
#*: |
#*:{{lang|tpi|skru bilong han}} (screw of the arm) = "[[elbow]]" |
||
#*: |
#*:{{lang|tpi|skru bilong lek}} (screw of the leg) = "[[knee]]" (Just {{lang|tpi|skru}} almost always indicates the knee. In liturgical contexts, {{lang|tpi|brukim skru}} is "kneel.") |
||
#*: |
#*:{{lang|tpi|gras bilong het}} (grass of the head) = "hair" (Hall, 1966: 90f) (Most commonly just {{lang|tpi|gras}} —see note on {{lang|tpi|skru bilong lek}} above.) |
||
#*[[Circumlocution|Periphrases]]: |
#*[[Circumlocution|Periphrases]]: |
||
#*: |
#*:{{lang|tpi|nambawan pikinini bilong misis kwin}} (literally "first child of [[Elizabeth II|Mrs Queen]]") = [[King Charles III]], then known through his relation to the Queen.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/prince-charles/9654071/Prince-of-Wales-nambawan-pikinini-visits-Papua-New-Guinea.html |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220112/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/prince-charles/9654071/Prince-of-Wales-nambawan-pikinini-visits-Papua-New-Guinea.html |archive-date=2022-01-12 |url-access=subscription |url-status=live|title=Prince of Wales, 'nambawan pikinini', visits Papua New Guinea|newspaper=[[The Daily Telegraph|The Telegraph]]|date=4 November 2013}}{{cbignore}}</ref> |
||
#A reduced grammar: lack of [[copula (linguistics)|copula]], [[determiner (linguistics)|determiners]]; reduced set of [[prepositions]], and [[grammatical conjunction|conjunctions]] |
#A reduced grammar: lack of [[copula (linguistics)|copula]], [[determiner (linguistics)|determiners]]; reduced set of [[prepositions]], and [[grammatical conjunction|conjunctions]] |
||
#Less differentiated phonology: {{IPA|[p]}} and {{IPA|[f]}} are not distinguished in Tok Pisin (they are in free variation). The [[Sibilant consonant|sibilants]] {{IPA|/s/}}, {{IPA|/z/}}, {{IPA|/ʃ/}}, {{IPA|/ʒ/}}, {{IPA|/tʃ/}}, and {{IPA|/dʒ/}} are also not distinguished. |
#Less differentiated phonology: {{IPA|[p]}} and {{IPA|[f]}} are not distinguished in Tok Pisin (they are in free variation). The [[Sibilant consonant|sibilants]] {{IPA|/s/}}, {{IPA|/z/}}, {{IPA|/ʃ/}}, {{IPA|/ʒ/}}, {{IPA|/tʃ/}}, and {{IPA|/dʒ/}} are also not distinguished. |
||
#:All of the English words |
#:All of the English words ''fish'', ''peach'', ''feast'', ''piss'', and ''peace'' would have been realised in Tok Pisin as {{lang|tpi|pis}}. In fact, the Tok Pisin {{lang|tpi|pis}} means "fish" (and usually has a sound closer to [{{IPA-link|ɪ}}], almost like the English word ''piss''). English ''piss'' was reduplicated to keep it distinct: thus {{lang|tpi|pispis}} means "urine" or "to urinate". |
||
#:Likewise, |
#:Likewise, {{lang|tpi|sip}} in Tok Pisin could have represented English ''ship'', ''jib'', ''jeep'', ''sieve'', ''sheep'', or ''chief''. In fact, it means "ship". |
||
==Vocabulary==<!-- This section is linked from [[List of British words not widely used in the United States]] --> |
==Vocabulary==<!-- This section is linked from [[List of British words not widely used in the United States]] --> |
||
Many words in the Tok Pisin language are derived from [[English language|English]] (with [[Australian English|Australian]] influences), indigenous [[Melanesia]]n languages and [[German language|German]] (part of the country was under German rule until 1919). Some examples: |
Many words in the Tok Pisin language are derived from [[English language|English]] (with [[Australian English|Australian]] influences), indigenous [[Melanesia]]n languages, and [[German language|German]] (part of the country was under German rule until 1919). Some examples: |
||
*{{lang|tpi|as}} = "bottom", "cause", "beginning" (from ''ass''/''arse''). {{lang|tpi|As ples bilong em}} = "his birthplace". {{lang|tpi|As bilong diwai}} = "the stump of a tree". |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|bagarap(im)}} = "broken", "to break down" (from ''bugger up''). The word is commonly used, with no vulgar undertone, in Tok Pisin and even in Papua New Guinea English. |
|||
**{{lang|tpi|bagarap olgeta}} = "completely broken" |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|balus}} = "bird" or more specifically a pigeon or dove (an Austronesian loan word); by extension "aeroplane" |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|belhat}} = "angry" (lit. "belly hot") |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|belo}} = "bell", as in {{lang|tpi|belo bilong lotu}} = "church bell". By extension "lunch" or "midday break" (from the bell rung to summon diners to the table). A fanciful derivation has been suggested from the "bellows" of horns used by businesses to indicate the beginning of the lunch hour, but this seems less likely than the straightforward derivation. |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|bensin}} = "petrol/gasoline" (from German {{lang|de|Benzin}}) |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|bilong wanem?}} = "why?" |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|braun}} = "brown" |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|buai}} = "betelnut" |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|bubu}} = "grandparent", any elderly relation; also "grandchild". Possibly from [[Hiri Motu]], where it is a familiar form of "tubu", as in "tubuna" or "tubugu". |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|diwai}} = "tree", "wood", "plant", "stick", etc. |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|gat bel}} = "pregnant" (lit. "has belly"; {{lang|tpi|pasin bilong givim bel}} = "fertility") |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|gras}} = "hair" (from ''grass'') |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|gude}} = "hello" (from ''[[:en:wikt:g'day|g'day]]'') |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|gut}} = "good" |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|(h)amamas}} = "happy" |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|hap}} = a piece of, as in {{lang|tpi|hap diwai}} = a piece of wood (from ''half'') |
|||
**{{lang|tpi|hapsait}} = "the other side" (from ''half side'') |
|||
**{{lang|tpi|hap ret}} = "purple" (from ''half red'') |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|haus}} = "house" or "building" (from German {{lang|de|Haus}} and/or English ''house'') |
|||
**{{lang|tpi|hausboi/hausmeri}} = "a male/female domestic servant"; {{lang|tpi|haus boi}} can also mean "servants quarters" |
|||
**{{lang|tpi|haus kaikai}} = restaurant ("house [of] food") |
|||
**{{lang|tpi|haus moni}} = "bank" ("house [of] money") |
|||
**{{lang|tpi|haus sik}} = "hospital" ("house [of] sick") |
|||
**{{lang|tpi|haus dok sik}} = "animal hospital" ("house [of] dog sick") |
|||
**{{lang|tpi|haus karai}} = "place of mourning" ("house [of] cry") |
|||
**{{lang|tpi|sit haus}} (vulgar) = "toilet" ("shit house"), also: |
|||
***{{lang|tpi|liklik haus}} = "toilet" |
|||
***{{lang|tpi|smol haus}} = "toilet/bathroom" ("small house") |
|||
**{{lang|tpi|[[Haus Tambaran|haus tambaran]]}} = "traditional Sepik-region house with artifacts of ancestors or for honoring ancestors; {{lang|tpi|tambaran}} means "ancestor spirit" or "ghost" |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|hevi}} = "heavy", "problem". {{lang|tpi|Em i gat bigpela hevi}} = "he has a big problem". |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|hukim pis}} = "catch fish" (from ''hook'') |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|kaikai}} = "food", "eat", "to bite" (Austronesian loan word) |
|||
**{{lang|tpi|kaikai bilong moningtaim}} = "breakfast" |
|||
**{{lang|tpi|kaikai bilong nait}} = "dinner/supper" |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|kakaruk}} = "chicken" (probably onomatapoetic, from the crowing of the rooster) |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|kamap}} = "arrive", "become" (from ''come up'') |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|kisim}} = "get", "take" (from ''get them'') |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|lotu}} = "church", "worship" from Fijian, but sometimes {{lang|tpi|sios}} is used for "church" |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|magani}} = "wallaby" |
|||
**{{lang|tpi|bikpela magani}} = "kangaroo" ("big wallaby") |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|mangi/manki}} = "small boy"; by extension, "young man" (probably from the English jocular/affectionate usage ''monkey'', applied to mischievous children, although a derivation from the German {{lang|de|Männchen}}, meaning "little man", has also been suggested) |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|manmeri}} = "people" (from {{lang|tpi|man}} "man" and {{lang|tpi|meri}} "woman") |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|maski}} = "it doesn't matter", "don't worry about it" (probably from German {{lang|de|macht nichts}} = "it doesn't matter") |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|maus gras}} = "moustache" ("mouth grass") |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|meri}} = "woman" (from the English name ''Mary''); also "female", e.g., {{lang|tpi|bulmakau meri}} (lit. "bull-cow female") = cow. |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|olgeta}} = "all" (from ''all together'') |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|olsem wanem}} = "what?", "what's going on?" (literally "like what"?); sometimes used as an informal greeting, similar to ''what's up?'' in English |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|[[palopa]]}} - homosexual man, or transsexual woman |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|pisin}} = "bird" (from ''pigeon''). (The homophony of this word with the name of the language has led to a limited association between the two; [[Mian language|Mian]] speakers, for example, refer to Tok Pisin as {{lang|mpt|wan weng}}, literally "bird language".) |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|pasim}} = "close", "lock" (from ''fasten'') |
|||
**{{lang|tpi|pasim maus}} = "shut up", "be quiet", i.e. {{lang|tpi|yu pasim maus}}, literally "you close mouth" = "shut up!" |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|paul}} = "wrong", "confused", i.e. {{lang|tpi|em i paul}} = "he is confused" (from English ''foul'') |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|pikinini}} = "child", ultimately from [[Portuguese language|Portuguese]]-influenced [[Lingua franca#Historical sense|Lingua franca]]; cf. English ''[[pickaninny]]'' |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|raskol}} = "thief, criminal" (from ''rascal'') |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|raus, rausim}} ({{lang|tpi|rausim}} is the transitive form) = "get out, throw out, remove" (from German {{lang|de|raus}} meaning "out") |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|rokrok}} = "frog" (probably onomatopoeic) |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|sapos}} = "if" (from ''suppose'') |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|save}} = "know", "to do habitually" (ultimately from [[Portuguese language|Portuguese]]-influenced [[Lingua franca#Historical sense|Lingua franca]], cf. English ''savvy'') |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|sit}} = "remnant" (from ''shit'') |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|solwara}} = "ocean" (from ''salt water'') |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|sop}} = "soap"; also |
|||
**{{lang|tpi|sop bilong tut}} = "toothpaste" |
|||
**{{lang|tpi|sop bilong gras}} = "shampoo" |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|stap}} = "stay", "be (somewhere)", "live" (from ''stop'') |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|susa}} = "sister", though nowadays very commonly supplanted by {{lang|tpi|sista}}. Some Tok Pisin speakers use {{lang|tpi|susa}} for a sibling of the opposite gender, while a sibling of the same gender as the speaker is a {{lang|tpi|b(a)rata}}. |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|susu}} = "milk, breasts" (from Malay {{lang|ms|[[:wikt:susu#Malay|susu]]}}) |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|tambu}} = "forbidden", but also "in-laws" (mother-in-law, brother-in-law, etc.) and other relatives whom one is forbidden to speak to, or mention the name of, in some PNG customs (from ''tabu'' or ''tambu'' in [[Taboo#Etymology|various Austronesian languages]], the origin of Eng. ''taboo'') |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|tasol}} = "only, just"; "but" (from ''that's all'') |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|Tok Inglis}} = "English language" |
|||
*{{lang|tpi|wanpela}} = "one", "a" ([[indefinite article]]). |
|||
==Example text== |
|||
* as – ''bottom'', ''cause'', ''beginning'' (from "ass"/"arse"). "As ples bilong em" = "his birthplace". "As bilong diwai" = "the stump of a tree". |
|||
Article 1 of the ''[[Universal Declaration of Human Rights]]'' in Tok Pisin: |
|||
* bagarap(im) – ''broken'', ''to break down'' (from "bugger up") – (the word is commonly used, with no vulgar undertone, in Tok Pisin and even in Papua New Guinea English). |
|||
:{{lang|tpi|Yumi olgeta mama karim umi long stap fri na wankain long wei yumi lukim i gutpela na strepela tru. Yumi olgeta igat ting ting bilong wanem samting i rait na rong na mipela olgeta i mas mekim gutpela pasin long ol narapela long tingting bilong brata susa.}}<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.ohchr.org/EN/UDHR/Pages/Language.aspx?LangID=pdg|title=TOKSAVE LONG OL RAITS BILONG OL MANMERI LONG OLGETA HAP BILONG DISPELA GIRAUN AS BILONG TOKTOK|website=ohchr.org}}</ref> |
|||
* bagarap olgeta – ''completely broken'' |
|||
* balus – ''bird'' or more specifically a pigeon or dove (an Austronesian loan word) - by extension ''aeroplane'' |
|||
* belhat – ''angry'' (lit. "belly hot") |
|||
* belo – ''bell'' – as in "belo bilong lotu" = "Church bell". By extension ''lunch'' or ''midday break'' (from the bell rung to summon diners to the table). A fanciful derivation has been suggested from the "bellows" of horns used by businesses to indicate the beginning of the lunch hour but this seems less likely than the straightforward derivation. |
|||
* bensin - ''petrol/gasoline'' (from German "Benzin") |
|||
* bilong wanem? – ''why?'' |
|||
* braun – ''brown'' (from German "braun") |
|||
* buai – "betelnut" |
|||
* bubu – ''grandparent'', any elderly relation – also ''grandchild''. Possibly from [[Hiri Motu]] – where it is a familiar form of ''tubu'', as in ''tubuna'' or ''tubugu''. |
|||
* diwai – ''tree'', ''wood'', ''plant'', ''stick'' etc. |
|||
* gat bel – ''pregnant'' (lit. "has belly"; pasin bilong givim bel = fertility) |
|||
* gras – ''hair'' (from "grass"). |
|||
* gut – ''good'' |
|||
* hamamas / amamas – ''happy'' |
|||
* hap – a piece of, as in "hap diwai" = a piece of wood. (from "half"). |
|||
* hapsait - ''the other side'' (from "half side") |
|||
* hap ret – ''purple'' (from "half red") |
|||
* haus – ''house'' or ''building'' (from German "Haus" meaning "house") |
|||
** hausboi/hausmeri – ''a male/female domestic servant'' - hausboi (or haus boi) can also mean "servants quarters" |
|||
** haus kaikai — restaurant (from "house food") |
|||
** haus moni – ''bank'' (from "house money") |
|||
** haus sik – ''hospital'' (from "house sick") |
|||
** haus dok sik – ''animal hospital'' (from "house dog sick") |
|||
** haus karai – ''place of mourning'' (from "house cry") |
|||
** sit haus (vulgar) – ''toilet'' (from "shit house"), also: |
|||
*** liklik haus – ''toilet'' |
|||
*** smol haus – ''toilet/bathroom'' ("small house") |
|||
** [[Haus Tambaran|haus tambaran]] – ''traditional Sepik-region house'' with artifacts of ancestors or for honoring ancestors; ''tambaran'' means "ancestor spirit" or "ghost" |
|||
* hevi – ''heavy'', ''problem''. "Em i gat bigpela hevi" = "he has a big problem". |
|||
* hukim pis – ''to catch fish'' (from "hook") |
|||
* kaikai – ''food'', ''eat'', ''to bite'' (Austronesian loan word); also |
|||
** kaikai bilong moningtaim – ''breakfast'' (from "food belong morning time") |
|||
** kaikai bilong nait – ''dinner/supper'' (from "food belong night") |
|||
* kakaruk – ''chicken'' (probably onomatapoetic, from the crowing of the rooster) |
|||
* kamap – ''arrive'', ''become'' (from "come up") |
|||
* kisim – ''get'', ''take'' (from "get them") |
|||
* lotu – ''church'', ''worship'' from Fijian, but sometimes ''sios'' is used for "church" |
|||
* mangi/manki – ''small boy'', by extension, ''young man'' (Probably from the English jocular/affectionate usage "monkey", applied to mischievous children, although a derivation from the German "Männchen", meaning "little man" has also been suggested) |
|||
* manmeri – ''people'' (from "man", ''man'', and "meri", ''woman'') |
|||
* maski – ''it doesn't matter'', ''don't worry about it'' (Probably from German "macht nichts" = "it doesn't matter") |
|||
* maus gras – ''moustache'' (lit: "mouth grass"). |
|||
* meri – ''woman'' (from the English name "Mary"). Also means ''female'', e.g., "bulmakau meri" (lit. "bull cow female") = cow. |
|||
* olgeta – ''all'' (from "all together") |
|||
* olsem wanem - ''what?'', ''what's going on?'' (Literally "like what"? Sometimes used as an informal greeting, similar to "what's up?" in English) |
|||
* pisin – ''bird'' (from "pigeon"). The homophony of this word with the name of the language has led to a limited association between the two; [[Mian language|Mian]] speakers, for example, refer to Tok Pisin as "wan weng", literally "bird language". |
|||
* pasim – ''close'', ''lock'' (from "fasten") |
|||
* pasim maus – ''shut up'', ''be quiet'', i.e. "yu pasim maus" lit: "you close mouth" = "shut up!" |
|||
* paul – ''wrong'', ''confused'', i.e. "em i paul" = "he is confused" (from English "foul") |
|||
* pikinini – ''child''. Ultimately from [[Portuguese language|Portuguese]] influenced [[Lingua franca#Historical sense|Lingua franca]], cf. ''[[pickaninny]]'' |
|||
* raskol - ''thief'', ''criminal'' (from "rascal") |
|||
* raus, rausim ("rausim" is the transitive form) – ''get out, throw out, remove'' (from German "raus" meaning "out")) |
|||
* rokrok – ''frog'' (probably onomatopoeic) |
|||
* sapos – ''if'' (from "suppose") |
|||
* save – ''know'', ''to do habitually''. Ultimately from [[Portuguese language|Portuguese]] influenced [[Lingua franca#Historical sense|Lingua franca]], cf. "savvy" |
|||
* sit – ''remnant'' (from "shit") |
|||
* solwara – ''ocean'' (from "salt water") |
|||
* sop – ''soap''; also |
|||
** sop bilong tit – ''toothpaste'' (from "soap belong teeth") |
|||
** sop bilong gras – ''shampoo'' (from "soap belong hair") |
|||
* stap – ''be'', ''live'', ''stay'' (from "stop") |
|||
* susa – ''sister'', though nowadays very commonly supplanted by "sista". Some Tok Pisin speakers use "susa" to indicate a sibling of the opposite gender, while a sibling of the same gender as the speaker is a "brata" or "barata". |
|||
* susu – ''milk, breasts'', from Malay |
|||
* tambu – ''forbidden'', from "taboo", but also means "in-laws" (mother-in-law, brother-in-law, etc.) and other relatives whom one is forbidden to speak to, or mention the name of, in some PNG customs. |
|||
* telefon – ''telephone'' |
|||
* tasol – ''but'', ''only'' (from "that's all") |
|||
Article 1 of the ''Universal Declaration of Human Rights'' in English: |
|||
==Example of Tok Pisin== |
|||
:''All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.''<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.un.org/en/about-us/universal-declaration-of-human-rights|title=Universal Declaration of Human Rights|newspaper=United Nations}}</ref> |
|||
{| |
|||
| |
|||
The [[Lord's Prayer]] in Tok Pisin: |
|||
:{{lang|tpi|Papa bilong mipela}} |
|||
:{{lang|tpi|Yu stap long heven.}} |
|||
:{{lang|tpi|Nem bilong yu i mas i stap holi.}} |
|||
:{{lang|tpi|Kingdom bilong yu i mas i kam.}} |
|||
:{{lang|tpi|Strongim mipela long bihainim laik bilong yu long graun,}} |
|||
:{{lang|tpi|olsem ol i bihainim long heven.}} |
|||
:{{lang|tpi|Givim mipela kaikai inap long tude.}} |
|||
:{{lang|tpi|Pogivim rong bilong mipela,}} |
|||
:{{lang|tpi|olsem mipela i pogivim ol arapela i mekim rong long mipela.}} |
|||
:{{lang|tpi|Sambai long mipela long taim bilong traim.}} |
|||
:{{lang|tpi|Na rausim olgeta samting nogut long mipela.}} |
|||
:{{lang|tpi|Kingdom na strong na glori, em i bilong yu tasol oltaim oltaim.}} |
|||
:{{lang|tpi|Tru.}} |
|||
|| |
|||
The Lord's Prayer in English: |
|||
:Our father, |
|||
:who art in heaven, |
|||
:hallowed be thy name. |
|||
:Thy kingdom come, |
|||
:thy will be done |
|||
:on earth as it is in heaven. |
|||
:Give us this day our daily bread, |
|||
:and forgive us our trespasses |
|||
:as we forgive those who trespass against us. |
|||
:Lead us not into temptation, |
|||
:but deliver us from evil, |
|||
:for thine is the kingdom, the power, and the glory, now and forever. |
|||
:Amen |
|||
|} |
|||
==Notes== |
==Notes== |
||
{{NoteFoot}} |
|||
==Citations== |
|||
{{reflist}} |
{{reflist}} |
||
==References== |
==References== |
||
{{refbegin|indent=yes}} |
|||
* {{cite book |
|||
*{{cite book |
|||
| last = Mihalic |
|||
|last1 = Dutton |first1 = Thomas Edward |
|||
| first = Francis |
|||
|last2 = Thomas |first2 = Dicks |
|||
| title = The Jacaranda Dictionary and Grammar of Melanesian Pidgin |
|||
|title = A New Course in Tok Pisin (New Guinea Pidgin) |
|||
| publisher = Jacaranda Press |
|||
|publisher = [[Australian National University]] |
|||
| location = [[Milton, Queensland]] |
|||
|location = [[Canberra]] |
|||
| year = 1971 |
|||
|year = 1985 |
|||
| isbn = 978-0-7016-8112-8 |
|||
|isbn = 978-0-85883-341-8 |
|||
| oclc = 213236 }} |
|||
|oclc = 15812820}} |
|||
* {{cite book |
|||
*{{cite book |
|||
| last = Murphy |
|||
|last = Mihalic |first = Francis |
|||
|title = The Jacaranda Dictionary and Grammar of Melanesian Pidgin |
|||
|publisher = Jacaranda Press |
|||
| edition = 6th |
|||
|location = [[Milton, Queensland]] |
|||
| publisher = Robert Brown |
|||
|year = 1971 |
|||
| location = [[Bathurst, New South Wales]] |
|||
|isbn = 978-0-7016-8112-8 |
|||
| year = 1985 |
|||
|oclc = 213236}} |
|||
| isbn = 978-0-404-14160-8 |
|||
*{{cite book |
|||
| oclc = 5354671 }} |
|||
|first1 = Peter |last1 = Mühlhäusler |
|||
* {{cite book |
|||
|first2 = Thomas Edward |last2 = Dutton |
|||
| last = Smith |
|||
|first3 = Suzanne |last3 = Romaine |
|||
| first = Geoff P. |
|||
|title = Tok Pisin Texts from the Beginning to the Present |
|||
|series = Varieties of English Around the World |
|||
| publisher = Battlebridge Publications |
|||
|location = Philadelphia, PA |
|||
|publisher = John Benjamins |
|||
| year = 2002 |
|||
|year = 2003 |
|||
| isbn = 978-1-903292-06-8 |
|||
|doi = 10.1075/veaw.t9 |
|||
| oclc = 49834526 }} |
|||
|isbn = 978-90-272-4718-6}} |
|||
* {{cite book |
|||
*{{cite conference <!-- Citation bot no --> |
|||
| last = Dutton |
|||
|last = Mundhenk |first = Norm |
|||
|chapter = Linguistic decisions in the Tok Pisin Bible |
|||
|author2=Thomas, Dicks |
|||
|series = Studies in Language Companion Series |
|||
| title = A New Course in Tok Pisin (New Guinea Pidgin) |
|||
|volume = 20 |
|||
| publisher = [[Australian National University]] |
|||
|page = 345 |
|||
| location = [[Canberra]] |
|||
|year = 1990 |
|||
|title = Melanesian Pidgin and Tok Pisin |
|||
| isbn = 978-0-85883-341-8 |
|||
|conference = Melanesian Pidgin and Tok Pisin: Proceedings of the First International Conference on Pidgins and Creoles in Melanesia |
|||
| oclc = 15812820 }} |
|||
|doi = 10.1075/slcs.20.16mun |
|||
* {{cite book |
|||
|isbn = 978-90-272-3023-2}} |
|||
| last = Wurm |
|||
*{{cite book |
|||
| first = S. A. |
|||
|last = Murphy |first = John Joseph |
|||
|author2=Mühlhäusler, P. |
|||
|title = The Book of Pidgin English |
|||
|edition = 6th |
|||
| publisher = [[Pacific Linguistics]] |
|||
|publisher = Robert Brown |
|||
| year = 1985 |
|||
|location = [[Bathurst, New South Wales]] |
|||
| isbn = 978-0-85883-321-0 |
|||
|year = 1985 |
|||
| oclc = 12883165 }} |
|||
|isbn = 978-0-404-14160-8 |
|||
* {{cite book |
|||
|oclc = 5354671}} |
|||
| title = Nupela Testamen bilong Bikpela Jisas Kraist |
|||
*{{cite book |
|||
| publisher = The Bible Society of Papua New Guinea |
|||
|ref = {{sfnref|Nupela Testamen bilong Bikpela Jisas Kraist|1969}} |
|||
| language = Tok Pisin |
|||
|title = Nupela Testamen bilong Bikpela Jisas Kraist |
|||
| year = 1980 |
|||
|publisher = The Bible Society of Papua New Guinea |
|||
| isbn = 978-0-647-03671-6 |
|||
|language = tpi |
|||
| oclc = 12329661 |
|||
|year = 1980 |
|||
|isbn = 978-0-647-03671-6 |
|||
* Volker, C.A. (2008). ''Papua New Guinea Tok Pisin English Dictionary''. South Melbourne: Oxford University Press. {{ISBN|978-0-19-555112-9}} |
|||
|oclc = 12329661}} |
|||
*{{ Cite book |
|||
| last = Romaine | first = Suzanne |
|||
| chapter= The Pacific |
|||
| editor-last = Cheshire | editor-first= Jenny |
|||
| title = English Around the World: Sociolinguistic Perspectives |
|||
| place =Cambridge |
|||
| publisher =Cambridge University Press |
|||
| pages = 619–636 |
|||
| doi = 10.1017/CBO9780511611889.042 |
|||
| year = 1991| isbn = 978-0-521-39565-6 |
|||
}} |
|||
*{{cite book |
|||
|last = Smith |first = Geoff P. |
|||
|title = Growing Up With Tok Pisin: Contact, Creolization, and Change in Papua New Guinea's National Language |
|||
|publisher = Battlebridge Publications |
|||
|location = London |
|||
|year = 2002 |
|||
|isbn = 978-1-903292-06-8 |
|||
|oclc = 49834526}} |
|||
*{{cite book |
|||
|last = Smith |first = Geoff P. |
|||
|chapter = Tok Pisin in Papua New Guinea: phonology |
|||
|title = Varieties of English 3: The Pacific and Australasia |
|||
|editor-last1 = Burridge |editor-first1 = Kate |
|||
|editor-last2 = Kortmann |editor-first2 = Bernd |
|||
|publisher = Mouton de Gruyter |
|||
|location = Berlin, Germany |
|||
|pages = 188–209 |
|||
|year = 2008 |
|||
|isbn = 978-3-11-019637-5}} |
|||
*{{cite book |
|||
|last=Verhaar |first=John W.M. |
|||
|date=1995 |
|||
|title=Toward a Reference Grammar of Tok Pisin: An Experiment in Corpus Linguistics |
|||
|journal=Oceanic Linguistics Special Publications |
|||
|series=Oceanic Linguistics Special Publications, no. 26 |
|||
|publisher=[[University of Hawaiʻi]] Press |
|||
|location=Honolulu |
|||
|jstor=20006762 |
|||
|isbn=9780824816728}} |
|||
*{{cite book |
|||
|last = Volker |first = C.A. |
|||
|year = 2008 |
|||
|title = Papua New Guinea Tok Pisin English Dictionary |
|||
|location = South Melbourne |
|||
|publisher = Oxford University Press |
|||
|isbn = 978-0-19-555112-9}} |
|||
*{{cite conference| chapter= A report on Neo-Melanesian|title = Pidginization and Creolization of Languages | date= 1971 | pages=413–422 | conference= Proceedings of a conference held at the University of the West Indies, Mona, Jamaica, April 1968 | publisher= Cambridge University Press| last= Wolfers| first= Edward| editor= Dell H. Hymes| editor-link= Dell Hymes | isbn = 9780521078337}} |
|||
*{{cite book |
|||
|editor-last1 = Wurm |editor-first1 = S. A. |
|||
|editor-last2 = Mühlhäusler |editor-first2 = P. |
|||
|title = Handbook of Tok Pisin (New Guinea Pidgin) |
|||
| place = Australian National University |
|||
|publisher = [[Pacific Linguistics]] |
|||
|series = Languages For Intercultural Communication In The Pacific Area Project of The Australian Academy of The Humanities, no. 1 |
|||
|year = 1985 |
|||
| hdl = 1885/145234 | hdl-access= free |
|||
|isbn = 978-0-85883-321-0 |
|||
|oclc = 12883165}} |
|||
{{refend}} |
|||
==Further reading== |
==Further reading== |
||
* |
*''[[Throwim Way Leg]]'' by [[Tim Flannery]] |
||
==External links== |
==External links== |
||
{{Wikibooks}} |
{{Wikibooks}} |
||
{{interwiki|code=tpi}} |
{{interwiki|code=tpi}} |
||
* |
*[http://www.tok-pisin.com/ Tok Pisin Translation, Resources, and Discussion] Offers Tok Pisin translator, vocabulary, and discussion groups. |
||
* |
*[https://www.tokpisin.info Tok Pisin (New Guinea Pidgin) English Bilingual Dictionary] |
||
* |
*[[voy:Tok Pisin phrasebook|Tok Pisin phrasebook]] on [[voy:Main Page|Wikivoyage]] |
||
* |
*[http://THSlone.tripod.com/MPEB.html#tokpisin A bibliography of Tok Pisin dictionaries, phrase books and study guides] |
||
* |
*[http://www.mihalicdictionary.org/ Revising the Mihalic Project] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160905125639/http://www.mihalicdictionary.org/ |date=2016-09-05}}, a collaborative internet project to revise and update Fr. Frank Mihalic's ''Grammar and Dictionary of Neo-Melanesian''. An illustrated online dictionary of Tok Pisin. |
||
* |
*[http://hawaii.edu/satocenter/langnet/definitions/tokpisin.html Tok Pisin background, vocabulary, sounds, and grammar], by Jeff Siegel |
||
* |
*[https://www.abc.net.au/news/tok-pisin Radio Australia Tok Pisin service] |
||
* |
*[https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCau_6QfTRE_VFd0lZVgjZmA Tok Pisin Radio on Youtube] |
||
* |
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20120126125709/http://www.bible.is/toc?version=TPIPNG&language=Tok+Pisin Buk Baibel long Tok Pisin (The Bible in Tok Pisin)] |
||
* |
*[http://justus.anglican.org/resources/bcp/PNG/tok_pisin_hc.html Eukarist] Anglican liturgy of Holy Communion in Tok Pisin |
||
*[http://www.eric.ed.gov/PDFS/ED401761.pdf ''Tokpisin Grammar Workbook for English Speakers. A Practical Approach to Learning the Sentence Structure of Melanesian Pidgin (or Tokpisin).''] |
|||
* [http://www.june29.com/HLP/lang/pidgin.html Pidgin/English Dictionary] as spoken in [[Port Moresby]] compiled by Terry D. Barhost and Sylvia O'Dell-Barhost. |
|||
*[http://roberteklund.info/PNG-TokPisin.htm Robert Eklund's Tok Pisin Page] – with recorded dialogs, children's ditties and a hymn ([http://www.ida.liu.se/~g-robek/PNG-TokPisin.htm alternative address]) |
|||
* [http://www.eric.ed.gov/PDFS/ED401761.pdf ''Tokpisin Grammar Workbook for English Speakers. A Practical Approach to Learning the Sentence Structure of Melanesian Pidgin (or Tokpisin).''] |
|||
* [http://roberteklund.info/PNG-TokPisin.htm Robert Eklund's Tok Pisin Page] – with recorded dialogs, children's ditties and a hymn ([http://www.ida.liu.se/~g-robek/PNG-TokPisin.htm alternative address]) |
|||
*[https://archive.org/details/rosettaproject_tpi_swadesh-1 Tok Pisin Swadesh List] by [[Rosetta Project]] |
*[https://archive.org/details/rosettaproject_tpi_swadesh-1 Tok Pisin Swadesh List] by [[Rosetta Project]] |
||
*Audio and video recordings of a Tok Pisin event. [https://scholarspace.manoa.hawaii.edu/handle/10125/36676 Traditional "house cry"/"kisim sori na kam" ceremony for big man Paul Ine]. Archived with [[Kaipuleohone]] |
*Audio and video recordings of a Tok Pisin event. [https://scholarspace.manoa.hawaii.edu/handle/10125/36676 Traditional "house cry"/"kisim sori na kam" ceremony for big man Paul Ine]. Archived with [[Kaipuleohone]] |
||
Line 414: | Line 476: | ||
{{Mid-pacific English-based pidgins and creoles}} |
{{Mid-pacific English-based pidgins and creoles}} |
||
{{Oceania topic|Languages of}} |
{{Oceania topic|Languages of}} |
||
{{Authority control}} |
{{Authority control}} |
||
[[Category:Articles containing video clips]] |
|||
[[Category:English-based pidgins and creoles]] |
[[Category:English-based pidgins and creoles]] |
||
[[Category:Languages of Papua New Guinea]] |
[[Category:Languages of Papua New Guinea]] |
||
[[Category:Subject–verb–object languages]] |
[[Category:Subject–verb–object languages]] |
||
[[Category:Latin alphabets]] |
Latest revision as of 16:46, 9 November 2024
Tok Pisin | |
---|---|
Pronunciation | [tok pisin][1] |
Native to | Papua New Guinea |
Native speakers | 130,000 (2004–2016)[2] L2 speakers: 4,000,000[2] |
English Creole
| |
Latin script (Tok Pisin alphabet) Pidgin Braille | |
Official status | |
Official language in | Papua New Guinea |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-2 | tpi |
ISO 639-3 | tpi |
Glottolog | tokp1240 |
Linguasphere | 52-ABB-cc |
Tok Pisin (English: /tɒk ˈpɪsɪn/ TOK PISS-in,[3][4] /tɔːk, -zɪn/ tawk, -zin;[5] Tok Pisin [tok pisin][1]), often referred to by English speakers as New Guinea Pidgin or simply Pidgin, is an English creole language spoken throughout Papua New Guinea. It is an official language of Papua New Guinea and the most widely used language in the country. However, in parts of the southern provinces of Western, Gulf, Central, Oro, and Milne Bay, the use of Tok Pisin has a shorter history and is less universal, especially among older people.
Between five and six million people use Tok Pisin to some degree, although not all speak it fluently. Many now learn it as a first language, in particular the children of parents or grandparents who originally spoke different languages (for example, a mother from Madang and a father from Rabaul). Urban families in particular, and those of police and defence force members, often communicate among themselves in Tok Pisin, either never gaining fluency in a local language (tok ples) or learning a local language as a second (or third) language, after Tok Pisin (and possibly English). Over the decades, Tok Pisin has increasingly overtaken Hiri Motu as the dominant lingua franca among town-dwellers.[6] Perhaps one million people now use Tok Pisin as a primary language. Tok Pisin is slowly "crowding out" other languages of Papua New Guinea.[7][6]
Name
[edit]Tok originates from English talk, but has a wider application, also meaning 'word, speech, language'. Pisin derives from the English word pidgin; the latter, in turn, may originate in the word business, which is descriptive of the typical development and use of pidgins as inter-ethnic trade languages.
While Tok Pisin's name in the language is Tok Pisin, it is also called "New Guinea Pidgin"[8] in English. Papua New Guinean anglophones often refer to Tok Pisin as "Pidgin" when speaking English.[note 1] This usage of "Pidgin" differs from the term pidgin (language) as used in linguistics. Tok Pisin is not a pidgin in the latter sense, since it has become a first language for many people (rather than simply a lingua franca to facilitate communication with speakers of other languages). As such, it is considered a creole in linguistic terminology.[note 2]
Classification
[edit]The Tok Pisin language is a result of Pacific Islanders intermixing, when people speaking numerous different languages were sent to work on plantations in Queensland and various islands (see South Sea Islander and blackbirding). The labourers began to develop a pidgin, drawing vocabulary primarily from English, but also from German, Malay, Portuguese and their own Austronesian languages (perhaps especially Kuanua, that of the Tolai people of East New Britain).
This English-based pidgin evolved into Tok Pisin in German New Guinea (where the German-based creole Unserdeutsch was also spoken). It became a widely used lingua franca and language of interaction between rulers and ruled, and among the ruled themselves who did not share a common vernacular. Tok Pisin and the closely related Bislama in Vanuatu and Pijin in the Solomon Islands, which developed in parallel, have traditionally been treated as varieties of a single Melanesian Pidgin English or "Neo-Melanesian" language. The flourishing of the mainly English-based Tok Pisin in German New Guinea (despite the language of the metropolitan power being German) is to be contrasted with Hiri Motu, the lingua franca of Papua, which was derived not from English but from Motu, the vernacular of the indigenous people of the Port Moresby area.
Official status
[edit]Along with English and Hiri Motu, Tok Pisin is one of the three official languages of Papua New Guinea. It is frequently the language of debate in the national parliament. Most government documents are produced in English, but public information campaigns are often partially or entirely in Tok Pisin. While English is the main language in the education system, some schools use Tok Pisin in the first three years of elementary education to promote early literacy.
Regional variations
[edit]There are considerable variations in vocabulary and grammar in various parts of Papua New Guinea, with distinct dialects in the New Guinea Highlands, the north coast of Papua New Guinea, and islands outside of New Guinea. For example, Pidgin speakers from Finschhafen speak rather quickly and often have difficulty making themselves understood elsewhere. The variant spoken on Bougainville and Buka is moderately distinct from that of New Ireland and East New Britain but is much closer to that than it is to the Pijin spoken in the rest of the Solomon Islands.
There are 4 sociolects of Tok Pisin:
- Tok Bus (meaning "talk of the remote areas") or Tok Kanaka (meaning "talk of the people of the remote areas")
- Tok Bilong Asples (meaning "language of the villages") which is the traditional rural Tok Pisin
- Tok Skul (meaning "talk of the schools") or Tok Bilong Taun (meaning "talk of the Towns") which is the urban Tok Pisin
- Tok Masta (meaning "language of the colonizers", unsystematically simplified English with some Tok Pisin words[9])[6]
Alphabet
[edit]The Tok Pisin alphabet contains 21 letters, five of which are vowels, and four digraphs.[10] The letters are (vowels in bold):
- a, b, d, e, f, g, h, i, k, l, m, n, o, p, r, s, t, u, v, w, y
Three of the digraphs (⟨ai⟩, ⟨au⟩, and ⟨oi⟩) denote diphthongs while the fourth, ⟨ng⟩, is used for both /ŋ/ and /ŋɡ/.
Phonology
[edit]Tok Pisin has a smaller number of phonemes than its lexifier language, English.[11] It has around 24 core phonemes:[11] 5 vowels and around 19 consonants. However, this varies with the local substrate languages and the level of education of the speaker. More educated speakers, and/or those where the substrate language(s) have larger phoneme inventories, may have as many as 10 distinct vowels.
Nasal plus plosive offsets lose the plosive element in Tok Pisin e.g. English hand becomes Tok Pisin han. Furthermore, voiced plosives become voiceless at the ends of words, so that English pig is rendered as pik in Tok Pisin.
Consonants
[edit]Labial | Coronal | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nasal | m | n | ŋ | |||
Plosive | voiceless | p | t | k | ||
voiced | b | d | ɡ | |||
Affricate | dʒ | |||||
Fricative | voiceless | f | s | h | ||
voiced | v | |||||
Approximant | w | l | j | |||
Rhotic | r |
- Voiced plosives are pronounced by many speakers (especially of Melanesian backgrounds) as prenasalized plosives.
- /t/, /d/, and /l/ can be either dental or alveolar consonants, while /n/ is only alveolar.
- In most Tok Pisin dialects, the phoneme /r/ is pronounced as the alveolar tap or flap, [ɾ]. There can be variation between /r/ and /l/.[12]
- The labiodental fricatives /f v/ may be marginal, with contrastive use present only in heavily Anglicized varieties.[11] The use of /f/ vs. /p/ is variable.[13] There is also variation between /f/ and /v/ in some words, such as faif/faiv 'five'.[14]
- Likewise, there may be marginal use of /ʃ ʒ/.[11]
Vowels
[edit]Tok Pisin has five pure vowels:
Front | Back | |
---|---|---|
Close | i | u |
Mid | e | o |
Open | a |
Grammar
[edit]The verb has a suffix, -im (< Eng. him) to indicate transitivity (luk, "look"; lukim, "see"). But some verbs, such as kaikai "eat", can be transitive without it. Tense is indicated by the separate words bai Future (< Eng. by and by) and bin (past) (< Eng. been). The present progressive tense is indicated by the word stap – e.g. Hem kaikai stap "He is eating".
The noun does not indicate number, though pronouns do.
Adjectives usually take the suffix -pela (now often pronounced -pla, though more so for pronouns, and -pela for adjectives; from "fellow") when modifying nouns; an exception is liklik "little".[note 3] It is also found on numerals and determiners:
- Tok Pisin: wanpela → Eng. "one"
- Tok Pisin: tupela → Eng. "two"
- Tok Pisin: dispela boi → Eng. "this bloke"
Pronouns show person, number, and clusivity. The paradigm varies depending on the local languages; dual number is common, while the trial is less so. The largest Tok Pisin pronoun inventory is,[15]
Singular | Dual | Trial | Plural | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1st exclusive | mi (I) < Eng. me |
mitupela (he/she and I) < Eng. *me two fellow |
mitripela (both of them, and I) Eng. *me three fellow |
mipela (all of them, and I) Eng. *me fellow |
1st inclusive | – | yumitupela (you and I) < Eng. *you me two fellow |
yumitripela (both of you, and I) < Eng. *you me three fellow |
yumipela or yumi (all of you, and I) < Eng. *you me fellow or *you me |
2nd | yu (thou) < Eng. you |
yutupela (you two) < Eng. *you two fellow |
yutripela (you three) < Eng. *you three fellow |
yupela (you four or more) < Eng. *you fellow |
3rd | em (he/she/it) < Eng. him |
tupela (they two) < Eng. *two fellow |
tripela (they three) < Eng. *three fellow |
ol (they four or more) < Eng. all |
Reduplication is very common in Tok Pisin. Sometimes it is used as a method of derivation; sometimes words just have it. Some words are distinguished only by reduplication: sip "ship", sipsip "sheep".
There are only two proper prepositions:
- the genitive preposition bilong (etym. < Eng. belong), which is equivalent to "of", "from" and some uses of "for": e.g. Ki bilong yu "your key"; Ol bilong Godons "They are from Gordon's".
- the oblique preposition long (etym. < Eng. along), which is used for various other relations (such as locative or dative): e.g. Mipela i bin go long blekmaket. "We went to the black market".
Some phrases are used as prepositions, such as 'long namel (bilong)', "in the middle of".
Several of these features derive from the common grammatical norms of Austronesian languages[note 4] – although usually in a simplified form. Other features, such as word order, are however closer to English.
Sentences which have a 3rd person subject often put the word i immediately before the verb. This may or may not be written separate from the verb, occasionally written as a prefix. Although the word is thought to be derived from "he" or "is", it is not itself a pronoun or a verb but a grammatical marker used in particular constructions, e.g., Kar i tambu long hia is "car forbidden here", i.e., "no parking".
Tense and aspect
[edit]Past tense: marked by bin (< Eng. been):
- Tok Pisin: Na praim minista i bin tok olsem.
- English: "And the prime minister spoke thus."[16]
Continuative same tense is expressed through: verb + i stap.
- Tok Pisin: Em i slip i stap.
- English: "He/She is sleeping."[17]
Completive or perfective aspect expressed through the word pinis (< Eng. finish):
- Tok Pisin: Em i lusim bot pinis.
- English: "He had got out of the boat."[18]
Transitive words are expressed through -im (< Eng. him):
- Tok Pisin: Yu pinisim stori nau.
- English: "Finish your story now!"[19]
Future is expressed through the word "bai" (< Eng. by and by):
- Tok Pisin: Nil nabaut bai i ros.
- English: "If you take just any nails that happen to be around, those will rust."[20]
Development of Tok Pisin
[edit]Tok Pisin is a language that developed out of regional dialects of the languages of the local inhabitants and English, brought into the country when English speakers arrived. There were four phases in the development of Tok Pisin that were laid out by Loreto Todd.
- Casual contact between English speakers and local people developed a marginal pidgin.
- Pidgin English was used between the local people. The language expanded from the users' mother tongue.
- As the interracial contact increased, the vocabulary expanded according to the dominant language.
- In areas where English was the official language, a depidginization occurred (Todd, 1990).
Tok Pisin is also known as a "mixed" language. This means that it consists of characteristics of different languages. Tok Pisin obtained most of its vocabulary from the English language (i.e., English is its lexifier). The origin of the syntax is a matter of debate. Edward Wolfers claimed that the syntax is from the substratum languages—the languages of the local peoples.[21] Derek Bickerton's analysis of creoles, on the other hand, claims that the syntax of creoles is imposed on the grammarless pidgin by its first native speakers: the children who grow up exposed to only a pidgin rather than a more developed language such as one of the local languages or English. In this analysis, the original syntax of creoles is in some sense the default grammar humans are born with.
Pidgins are less elaborated than non-Pidgin languages. Their typical characteristics found in Tok Pisin are:
- A smaller vocabulary which leads to metaphors to supply lexical units:
- Smaller vocabulary:
- vot = "election" (n) and "vote" (v)
- hevi = "heavy" (adj) and "weight" (n)
- Metaphors:
- skru bilong han (screw of the arm) = "elbow"
- skru bilong lek (screw of the leg) = "knee" (Just skru almost always indicates the knee. In liturgical contexts, brukim skru is "kneel.")
- gras bilong het (grass of the head) = "hair" (Hall, 1966: 90f) (Most commonly just gras —see note on skru bilong lek above.)
- Periphrases:
- nambawan pikinini bilong misis kwin (literally "first child of Mrs Queen") = King Charles III, then known through his relation to the Queen.[22]
- Smaller vocabulary:
- A reduced grammar: lack of copula, determiners; reduced set of prepositions, and conjunctions
- Less differentiated phonology: [p] and [f] are not distinguished in Tok Pisin (they are in free variation). The sibilants /s/, /z/, /ʃ/, /ʒ/, /tʃ/, and /dʒ/ are also not distinguished.
- All of the English words fish, peach, feast, piss, and peace would have been realised in Tok Pisin as pis. In fact, the Tok Pisin pis means "fish" (and usually has a sound closer to [ɪ], almost like the English word piss). English piss was reduplicated to keep it distinct: thus pispis means "urine" or "to urinate".
- Likewise, sip in Tok Pisin could have represented English ship, jib, jeep, sieve, sheep, or chief. In fact, it means "ship".
Vocabulary
[edit]Many words in the Tok Pisin language are derived from English (with Australian influences), indigenous Melanesian languages, and German (part of the country was under German rule until 1919). Some examples:
- as = "bottom", "cause", "beginning" (from ass/arse). As ples bilong em = "his birthplace". As bilong diwai = "the stump of a tree".
- bagarap(im) = "broken", "to break down" (from bugger up). The word is commonly used, with no vulgar undertone, in Tok Pisin and even in Papua New Guinea English.
- bagarap olgeta = "completely broken"
- balus = "bird" or more specifically a pigeon or dove (an Austronesian loan word); by extension "aeroplane"
- belhat = "angry" (lit. "belly hot")
- belo = "bell", as in belo bilong lotu = "church bell". By extension "lunch" or "midday break" (from the bell rung to summon diners to the table). A fanciful derivation has been suggested from the "bellows" of horns used by businesses to indicate the beginning of the lunch hour, but this seems less likely than the straightforward derivation.
- bensin = "petrol/gasoline" (from German Benzin)
- bilong wanem? = "why?"
- braun = "brown"
- buai = "betelnut"
- bubu = "grandparent", any elderly relation; also "grandchild". Possibly from Hiri Motu, where it is a familiar form of "tubu", as in "tubuna" or "tubugu".
- diwai = "tree", "wood", "plant", "stick", etc.
- gat bel = "pregnant" (lit. "has belly"; pasin bilong givim bel = "fertility")
- gras = "hair" (from grass)
- gude = "hello" (from g'day)
- gut = "good"
- (h)amamas = "happy"
- hap = a piece of, as in hap diwai = a piece of wood (from half)
- hapsait = "the other side" (from half side)
- hap ret = "purple" (from half red)
- haus = "house" or "building" (from German Haus and/or English house)
- hausboi/hausmeri = "a male/female domestic servant"; haus boi can also mean "servants quarters"
- haus kaikai = restaurant ("house [of] food")
- haus moni = "bank" ("house [of] money")
- haus sik = "hospital" ("house [of] sick")
- haus dok sik = "animal hospital" ("house [of] dog sick")
- haus karai = "place of mourning" ("house [of] cry")
- sit haus (vulgar) = "toilet" ("shit house"), also:
- liklik haus = "toilet"
- smol haus = "toilet/bathroom" ("small house")
- haus tambaran = "traditional Sepik-region house with artifacts of ancestors or for honoring ancestors; tambaran means "ancestor spirit" or "ghost"
- hevi = "heavy", "problem". Em i gat bigpela hevi = "he has a big problem".
- hukim pis = "catch fish" (from hook)
- kaikai = "food", "eat", "to bite" (Austronesian loan word)
- kaikai bilong moningtaim = "breakfast"
- kaikai bilong nait = "dinner/supper"
- kakaruk = "chicken" (probably onomatapoetic, from the crowing of the rooster)
- kamap = "arrive", "become" (from come up)
- kisim = "get", "take" (from get them)
- lotu = "church", "worship" from Fijian, but sometimes sios is used for "church"
- magani = "wallaby"
- bikpela magani = "kangaroo" ("big wallaby")
- mangi/manki = "small boy"; by extension, "young man" (probably from the English jocular/affectionate usage monkey, applied to mischievous children, although a derivation from the German Männchen, meaning "little man", has also been suggested)
- manmeri = "people" (from man "man" and meri "woman")
- maski = "it doesn't matter", "don't worry about it" (probably from German macht nichts = "it doesn't matter")
- maus gras = "moustache" ("mouth grass")
- meri = "woman" (from the English name Mary); also "female", e.g., bulmakau meri (lit. "bull-cow female") = cow.
- olgeta = "all" (from all together)
- olsem wanem = "what?", "what's going on?" (literally "like what"?); sometimes used as an informal greeting, similar to what's up? in English
- palopa - homosexual man, or transsexual woman
- pisin = "bird" (from pigeon). (The homophony of this word with the name of the language has led to a limited association between the two; Mian speakers, for example, refer to Tok Pisin as wan weng, literally "bird language".)
- pasim = "close", "lock" (from fasten)
- pasim maus = "shut up", "be quiet", i.e. yu pasim maus, literally "you close mouth" = "shut up!"
- paul = "wrong", "confused", i.e. em i paul = "he is confused" (from English foul)
- pikinini = "child", ultimately from Portuguese-influenced Lingua franca; cf. English pickaninny
- raskol = "thief, criminal" (from rascal)
- raus, rausim (rausim is the transitive form) = "get out, throw out, remove" (from German raus meaning "out")
- rokrok = "frog" (probably onomatopoeic)
- sapos = "if" (from suppose)
- save = "know", "to do habitually" (ultimately from Portuguese-influenced Lingua franca, cf. English savvy)
- sit = "remnant" (from shit)
- solwara = "ocean" (from salt water)
- sop = "soap"; also
- sop bilong tut = "toothpaste"
- sop bilong gras = "shampoo"
- stap = "stay", "be (somewhere)", "live" (from stop)
- susa = "sister", though nowadays very commonly supplanted by sista. Some Tok Pisin speakers use susa for a sibling of the opposite gender, while a sibling of the same gender as the speaker is a b(a)rata.
- susu = "milk, breasts" (from Malay susu)
- tambu = "forbidden", but also "in-laws" (mother-in-law, brother-in-law, etc.) and other relatives whom one is forbidden to speak to, or mention the name of, in some PNG customs (from tabu or tambu in various Austronesian languages, the origin of Eng. taboo)
- tasol = "only, just"; "but" (from that's all)
- Tok Inglis = "English language"
- wanpela = "one", "a" (indefinite article).
Example text
[edit]Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in Tok Pisin:
- Yumi olgeta mama karim umi long stap fri na wankain long wei yumi lukim i gutpela na strepela tru. Yumi olgeta igat ting ting bilong wanem samting i rait na rong na mipela olgeta i mas mekim gutpela pasin long ol narapela long tingting bilong brata susa.[23]
Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in English:
- All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.[24]
Notes
[edit]- ^ The published court reports of Papua New Guinea refer to Tok Pisin as "Pidgin": see for example Schubert v The State [1979] PNGLR 66.
- ^ See the Glottolog entry for Tok Pisin (itself evidence that the linguistic community considers it a language in its own right, and prefers to name it Tok Pisin), as well as numerous references therein.
- ^ Liklik can also be used as an adverb meaning "slightly", as in dispela bikpela liklik ston, "this slightly big stone".
- ^ The language Tolai is often named[citation needed] as having had an important influence on early Tok Pisin.
Citations
[edit]- ^ a b Smith 2008.
- ^ a b Tok Pisin at Ethnologue (25th ed., 2022)
- ^ Laurie Bauer, 2007, The Linguistics Student's Handbook, Edinburgh
- ^ "Tok Pisin | Definition of Tok Pisin in English by Oxford Dictionaries". Oxford Dictionaries | English. Archived from the original on September 24, 2018. Retrieved 2018-09-24.
- ^ "Definition of Tok Pisin". www.merriam-webster.com. Retrieved 2022-11-16.
- ^ a b c Mühlhäusler, Dutton & Romaine 2003, pp. 1–5.
- ^ A.V. (24 July 2017). "Papua New Guinea's incredible linguistic diversity". The Economist. Retrieved 20 July 2017.
- ^ Nupela Testamen bilong Bikpela Jisas Kraist 1969.
- ^ Mühlhäusler, Peter; Monaghan, Paul (1999). Pidgin phrasebook (2nd ed.). Hawthorn, Vic., Australia: Lonely Planet Publications. p. 99. ISBN 0864425872.
- ^ Mundhenk 1990, p. 372.
- ^ a b c d e Smith 2008, p. 195.
- ^ Smith 2008, p. 200.
- ^ Smith 2008, pp. 199–200.
- ^ Smith 2008, p. 196.
- ^ Verhaar 1995, p. 354.
- ^ Romaine 1991, p. 629.
- ^ Romaine 1991, p. 631.
- ^ Mühlhäusler, Peter (1984), Tok Pisin and its relevance to theoretical issues in creolistics and general linguistics in Wurm & Mühlhäusler 1985, p. 462.
- ^ Mühlhäusler, Peter (1984), The scientific study of Tok Pisin: language planning and the Tok Pisin lexicon in Wurm & Mühlhäusler 1985, p. 640.
- ^ Verhaar 1995, p. 315.
- ^ Wolfers 1971, p. 413.
- ^ "Prince of Wales, 'nambawan pikinini', visits Papua New Guinea". The Telegraph. 4 November 2013. Archived from the original on 2022-01-12.
- ^ "TOKSAVE LONG OL RAITS BILONG OL MANMERI LONG OLGETA HAP BILONG DISPELA GIRAUN AS BILONG TOKTOK". ohchr.org.
- ^ "Universal Declaration of Human Rights". United Nations.
References
[edit]- Dutton, Thomas Edward; Thomas, Dicks (1985). A New Course in Tok Pisin (New Guinea Pidgin). Canberra: Australian National University. ISBN 978-0-85883-341-8. OCLC 15812820.
- Mihalic, Francis (1971). The Jacaranda Dictionary and Grammar of Melanesian Pidgin. Milton, Queensland: Jacaranda Press. ISBN 978-0-7016-8112-8. OCLC 213236.
- Mühlhäusler, Peter; Dutton, Thomas Edward; Romaine, Suzanne (2003). Tok Pisin Texts from the Beginning to the Present. Varieties of English Around the World. Philadelphia, PA: John Benjamins. doi:10.1075/veaw.t9. ISBN 978-90-272-4718-6.
- Mundhenk, Norm (1990). "Linguistic decisions in the Tok Pisin Bible". Melanesian Pidgin and Tok Pisin. Melanesian Pidgin and Tok Pisin: Proceedings of the First International Conference on Pidgins and Creoles in Melanesia. Studies in Language Companion Series. Vol. 20. p. 345. doi:10.1075/slcs.20.16mun. ISBN 978-90-272-3023-2.
- Murphy, John Joseph (1985). The Book of Pidgin English (6th ed.). Bathurst, New South Wales: Robert Brown. ISBN 978-0-404-14160-8. OCLC 5354671.
- Nupela Testamen bilong Bikpela Jisas Kraist (in Tok Pisin). The Bible Society of Papua New Guinea. 1980. ISBN 978-0-647-03671-6. OCLC 12329661.
- Romaine, Suzanne (1991). "The Pacific". In Cheshire, Jenny (ed.). English Around the World: Sociolinguistic Perspectives. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 619–636. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511611889.042. ISBN 978-0-521-39565-6.
- Smith, Geoff P. (2002). Growing Up With Tok Pisin: Contact, Creolization, and Change in Papua New Guinea's National Language. London: Battlebridge Publications. ISBN 978-1-903292-06-8. OCLC 49834526.
- Smith, Geoff P. (2008). "Tok Pisin in Papua New Guinea: phonology". In Burridge, Kate; Kortmann, Bernd (eds.). Varieties of English 3: The Pacific and Australasia. Berlin, Germany: Mouton de Gruyter. pp. 188–209. ISBN 978-3-11-019637-5.
- Verhaar, John W.M. (1995). Toward a Reference Grammar of Tok Pisin: An Experiment in Corpus Linguistics. Oceanic Linguistics Special Publications, no. 26. Honolulu: University of Hawaiʻi Press. ISBN 9780824816728. JSTOR 20006762.
{{cite book}}
:|journal=
ignored (help) - Volker, C.A. (2008). Papua New Guinea Tok Pisin English Dictionary. South Melbourne: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-555112-9.
- Wolfers, Edward (1971). "A report on Neo-Melanesian". In Dell H. Hymes (ed.). Pidginization and Creolization of Languages. Proceedings of a conference held at the University of the West Indies, Mona, Jamaica, April 1968. Cambridge University Press. pp. 413–422. ISBN 9780521078337.
- Wurm, S. A.; Mühlhäusler, P., eds. (1985). Handbook of Tok Pisin (New Guinea Pidgin). Languages For Intercultural Communication In The Pacific Area Project of The Australian Academy of The Humanities, no. 1. Australian National University: Pacific Linguistics. hdl:1885/145234. ISBN 978-0-85883-321-0. OCLC 12883165.
Further reading
[edit]External links
[edit]- Tok Pisin Translation, Resources, and Discussion Offers Tok Pisin translator, vocabulary, and discussion groups.
- Tok Pisin (New Guinea Pidgin) English Bilingual Dictionary
- Tok Pisin phrasebook on Wikivoyage
- A bibliography of Tok Pisin dictionaries, phrase books and study guides
- Revising the Mihalic Project Archived 2016-09-05 at the Wayback Machine, a collaborative internet project to revise and update Fr. Frank Mihalic's Grammar and Dictionary of Neo-Melanesian. An illustrated online dictionary of Tok Pisin.
- Tok Pisin background, vocabulary, sounds, and grammar, by Jeff Siegel
- Radio Australia Tok Pisin service
- Tok Pisin Radio on Youtube
- Buk Baibel long Tok Pisin (The Bible in Tok Pisin)
- Eukarist Anglican liturgy of Holy Communion in Tok Pisin
- Tokpisin Grammar Workbook for English Speakers. A Practical Approach to Learning the Sentence Structure of Melanesian Pidgin (or Tokpisin).
- Robert Eklund's Tok Pisin Page – with recorded dialogs, children's ditties and a hymn (alternative address)
- Tok Pisin Swadesh List by Rosetta Project
- Audio and video recordings of a Tok Pisin event. Traditional "house cry"/"kisim sori na kam" ceremony for big man Paul Ine. Archived with Kaipuleohone